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RECRUITING
NCT06065150
NA

Early Surgery Versus 3 Days Non-surgical Management in Acute Small Bowel Obstruction (SURGI-BOW)

Sponsor: University Hospital, Angers

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

For uncomplicated acute small bowel obstruction (aSBO), the "Bologna guidelines" recommend non-surgical management of 72 hours before considering surgery. This treatment is based on the placement of a nasogastric tube and the correction of hydro-electrolyte disorders. Non-surgical management is only effective in 60 to 70% and surgery is therefore necessary in 30 to 40% of cases after medical treatment for at least 3 days. This therefore leads to an increase in the length of hospital stay. Some authors also point out that postponing surgery for 3 days would aggravate the morbidity and mortality of surgery. Indeed, aSBO surgery has a complication rate of 10-40% and a mortality of up to 4%. There is a lack of studies evaluating what is the best management strategy for aSBO, especially with regard to the duration of medical treatment. Many recent studies plead in favor of early surgical treatment (\<24 hours) which would reduce the morbidity and mortality rate of surgery but also the overall cost of treatment by reducing the length of stay. This paradigm shift is linked to the improvement of anesthetic and intensive care management over the last few years, but also to the advent of laparoscopy in emergency surgery. Indeed, laparoscopy could reduce the duration of hospitalization but also the operative morbidity and mortality. However, this surgical approach is not feasible in all situations and the conversion rate is reported in 30 to 76% of cases. One of the factors favoring the feasibility of the laparoscopic approach is the performance of early surgery. Another parameter favoring the feasibility of the laparoscopic approach is the aSBO mechanism: an aSBO on flange (SBA) is more likely to be treated effectively by laparoscopic than an aSBO on multiple adhesions (MA). In the literature, there is little to differentiate SBAs from MAs. Advances in CT scans have made it possible to describe the signs associated with the SBA mechanism and then to propose a score making it possible to predict the SBA mechanism with good performance (sensitivity 67.6%, specificity 84.6%). This score not only has the advantage of predicting the mechanism of the occlusion but it also makes it possible to predict the failure of non-surgical treatment if the score is ≥5.

Official title: SURGI-BOW - Early Surgery Versus 3 Days Non-surgical Management in Acute Small Bowel Obstruction: a Randomized Open-label Controlled Study

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

630

Start Date

2024-01-30

Completion Date

2028-01-29

Last Updated

2024-06-13

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

Standard support

See arm/group descriptions

PROCEDURE

Early surgery proposed according to the radiological score

* If score ≥ 5: the risk of medical treatment failure is multiplied by 2.9 (Feuerstoss F et al, J Gastrointest Surg 2021). Early surgical treatment is proposed; that is, the procedure is performed within 24 hours of admission. The surgery is initiated by laparoscopy and converted to open surgery if necessary. * If score \< 5: the risk of medical treatment failure is reduced. Initial medical treatment is therefore offered in accordance with standard management.

Locations (14)

University Hospital of Amiens

Amiens, France

University Hospital of Angers

Angers, France

University Hospital of Brest

Brest, France

University Hospital of Tours

Chambray-lès-Tours, France

Hospital of Haut Anjou

Château-Gontier, France

University Hospital of Dijon Bourgogne

Dijon, France

University Hospital of Grenoble-Alpes

Grenoble, France

Hospital of Vendée

La Roche-sur-Yon, France

University Hospital of Montpellier

Montpellier, France

University Hospital of Nantes

Nantes, France

University Hospital of Nice

Nice, France

University Hospital of Lyon

Pierre-Bénite, France

University Hospital of Rennes

Rennes, France

University Hospital of Strasbourg

Strasbourg, France